Abstract
The dynamic wetting behavior of droplets has been of wide concern due to the hazards of accretion/icing of supercooled droplets on engineering components/systems served in low temperature freezing rain environment; thus, it is urgent to establish the relationship between droplet depinning/removing behaviors and surface characteristics. In this article, the actual rotation conditions of moving components such as wind turbine blades are simulated. The self-cleaning hydrophobic coating surface(S1) and bionic superhydrophobic coating surface(S2) show outstanding droplet removal performance compared to hydrophilic bare steel surface(S0), and the average speed of the droplet removal is increased by 400-500%. The "creeping-sliding" behavior of droplets on self-cleaning coatings is investigated by the change of droplet displacement(ΔD). The effect of the energy storage caused by the droplet creeping process provides initial kinetic energy for the droplet removal. Combined with the experimental data and theoretical model, the critical depinning resistance is calculated. The difference of the wetting interface free energy(ΔEx) during the dynamic wetting process of the droplets on the bionic superhydrophobic self-cleaning surface is researched. And the influence mechanism of the droplet embedded depth(x) on the creeping/sliding behavior in the nanotexture is clarified. Thus, the mechanical criterion of droplet depinning is proposed (the error is about 10%). The results can provide a theoretical basis for the design principle of antifreezing rain coatings on moving components.
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More From: Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids
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